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WR's Player Welfare Initiative

Posted: Fri Oct 10, 2025 10:35 am
by Which Tyler

Re: WR's Player Welfare Initiative

Posted: Fri Oct 10, 2025 11:25 am
by Danno
Sweet zombie jesus, the opening few minutes are the agonising worst of squidge.

Skip to 3mins to get past the bulk of it.

Re: WR's Player Welfare Initiative

Posted: Fri Oct 10, 2025 3:03 pm
by Puja
Have not watched the video yet, but the article giving the details sounds great:
The guidelines, developed by a panel of medical experts, coaches, unions, competitions and player representatives, are designed to better manage workload of players. The agreement also ensures a cap of 30 matches per season, alongside a limit of six consecutive weeks of action before rest is required.
{Googles "how long is the Rugby World Cup"} Apparently RWC 2027 is 43 days, or 6 weeks and a day. Can't imagine that's not where that limit has come from! I can only assume that they're confident of Australia not getting to the final, or they'll allow it to round down.
Players will also benefit from a mandatory five-week off-season break, at least one week’s rest following international duty, and a minimum of 12 weeks away from contact training across the year. Clearer communication between clubs and national teams is also encouraged to keep workloads consistent and carefully monitored.
That sounds terrific. If properly implemented and without "exceptions". Plus I'm waiting to see how the quart into a pint pot that is the French league and international sides works with giving players extra time off.
The recommendations have been supported by leading leagues, unions and the International Rugby Players Association, providing a united stance on one of the most important issues in the modern game. In areas where no domestic player load agreements are currently in place, the new framework will act as a safety net.

World Rugby have made these measures a condition of approval for the upcoming Nations Championship, which will begin in 2026 and reshape the international calendar.
Smart use of their leverage by the IRB there. Although I would like to know what the repercussions of not following the guidelines are and also what happens when there's arguments between two stakeholders. If a club plays a player for 6 consecutive weeks before the 6N, does the international side have to rest them for the first game? What happens if the country flogs a player and leaves the club with no space to fit 12 weeks away from contact training?

Seems like a great statement of intent. Let's see how they actually implement and enforce it.

Puja